Not bad not bad ,been plowed more this year then many other years, but sidewalks could have done a better job a lot of the main sidewalks weren’t done made for a tough hike to school … Maybe looking at the route of the sidewalk plows may help out for more efficiency and help plan a better route and parts won’t get missed ie Merrit cres off paisley Rd also half of Paisley Rd .Thank you for asking the public for their opinion !

I am a taxi driver that was on shift last night and I am so very impressed and appreciative of the response that all the grater and plow workers put in last night to make this city accessible for this mornings commute!!! Only have one critique and that was because the graters were used there was no salt spread in those areas ( so maybe add salt to those routes somehow?). Overall I am very happy to have services that allow me the fortune to come home to my family at the end of my day!! Great job!!!

Woodland Glen Drive nice and clean
side walk as well
Any able body should exercise their rights and clean side walk.
U R going to feel muscles you long forgotten you have.
Haha
Have a nice snowy Mother Winter

Nice and clean on Woodland Glen Drive, side walk as well
Good job.
All able body should exercise their rights and clean side walk instead waiting for city
Your body is going to thank you for that
Have a snowy happy Mother Winter

Would be great if there wasn’t a trailer parked on the street which caused the plow to leave a pile of snow in front of the community mailbox. It’s now very hard to reach. Otherwise it’s good!
Ps. Love that you are always looking for feedback and take action on things. It’s very refreshing!

Booked tickets to see Star Wars before I knew the weather took a nasty turn around 8 PM. My showing was at 10:30, so I left my west-end home around 9:45. Main streets were a mess when we left, and weren’t much better when the movie let out around 12:50 AM (this is main streets; I know the residential streets were scheduled to be plowed starting at 11 PM, thanks to the mayor’s Twitter feed). Clair Road and Willow Road were still a mess then. I shovelled my driveway as soon as I got home (finished around 2 AM!) and saw the plow go by around 1:40 or so. On the whole, I’d say my reaction is mixed: my street was plowed relatively quickly, but the main streets were still awful at 1 AM. For the record, no more snow fell on my car while it was parked at the theatre from 10:15 to 12:45.

The worst by far was under provincial jurisdiction: the Hanlon Parkway. On the way to the theatre on Clair Road, there were at least three cars either crashed or in the ditch, though based on the drivers I’ve seen on Marksam Road the past three days (the red Chevrolet Colorado, the blue Honda Civic coupe with damage to both its bumpers, and the dark silver Infiniti G35, I’m particularly looking in your direction), I can possibly chalk up some of those accidents up to driver error. That said, the province has REALLY dropped the ball on our major highway though town and our city should demand accountability from the provincial government.

That said, Mr. Mayor, with regard to the Hanlon Parkway, some in my neighbourhood have some further concerns regarding the highway. In addition to the poor response in snow clearing last night, we have some concerns about noise from traffic, mainly truck traffic.Right now, the noise levels are exceptionally bad; my neighbour on Sanderson Drive says that the noise from vehicles is so bad, he and his wife are unable to enjoy summers on their patio like they could when they moved to the neighbourhood in 1982. I’m farther away, on Marksam Road, but the highway noise is still quite audible from my back deck (my backyard faces east, toward the Hanlon). Making matters even worse is transport truck drivers’ use of engine braking, which is window-rattlingly loud. With the expansion/replacement of Highway 7 finally gaining steam, we fear it will exacerbate an already bad situation. Other highways in Ontario have noise-mitigating structures along their lengths (and they don’t have traffic lights creating a need for trucks to brake so loudly, I might add); could the Hanlon not have the same? My aforementioned neighbour living on Sanderson also mentioned how highways in Sweden (if memory serves) have active noise-cancellation…kind of like Bose headphones or high-end cars. More expensive, certainly…but maybe we could pilot such technology in Ontario?

I know it is a provincial highway, under provincial jurisdiction, and your response, as well as the city’s response, is limited by this factor, but I feel you have a greater ability than just my neighbours and myself to effect change with the province, and to be the champion of those living near and using the Hanlon.

Oh, one final note: now that the snow has fallen and the streets are narrower as a result, perhaps someone from the city could come out on a weekday and check out the north end of Marksam Road near the Church of Latter-Day Saints. Students from Conestoga College park on both sides of the street there, and as a result the street is getting choked there. I submitted a request during the summer for the city to look into it, but maybe now that the snow has fallen, staff can see for themselves just how bad it’s getting there.

My neighbours and I have some other concerns regarding the Hanlon Parkway, and I’m sure city council would have more sway with the province than we would. Is there some way I could get our concerns to you?

As a former employee of the city, my street (Dovercliffe road) was GREAT this morning. Curb to curb, just the way its supposed to be.
Now the sidewalks, are another story. The part at the park seems to be forgotten too often. There are elderly people forced onto the street because the sidewalk is being overlooked. Looks like a concerned resident shovelled a narrow path today.